After installing Bytecode Outline, I realized this was the one I had installed for Luna anyway. (The website says there were 25 failed installs with the same dependency problem in the last 7 days).
I first tried Bytecode Visualizer but install failed. I’ve been looking at bytecode a good fit for the book to make sure I understand why things are happening. See my impressions of the Contrast plugin. The JBoss Tool plugin was in beta on Mars release day. You pick that plugin and then unselect everything except “Freemarker IDE”. Note that it is listed under the JBoss Tool Project.
So I’m using the update site.įreemarker syntax highlighting and macro assistance. It was in Eclipse MarketPlace – however I couldn’t install from there. I’m using SonarLint instead.įor finding memory leaks. But I’m ready for when Java 9 comes out.) I stopped installing PMD and FindBugs. (I”m on Java 8 right now so this is redundant at the moment. I also included the SonarLint Java Configuration Helper so it can see the version of Java I am using.
It gives you static analysis findings in Eclipse. I installed SonarLint last year and quickly came to rely on it. Tomcat integration supporting recent versions of Tomcat. I added Contrast and Bytecode Analyzer as plugins I installed in the past 12 months that I like. Everything installed easily from Eclipse Marketplace unless otherwise noted. I didn’t install it this year as I hardly used it.
Last year, I tried out the Code Recommenders plugin. I don’t remember that problem in previous years. A number of plugins were beta for Luna or I had to use the Kepler version. The significant plugins I use are listed in this table. Cleaning plugin house once a year is nice. Like last year, I decided to install the plugins I need for Eclipse Marketplace so I can shed the plugins I tried out and don’t actually want. I was a little worried about this since I didn’t like the home page. (I backed it up first in case.) Then I saw the Neon slash screen. I like to upload my workspace in place so I agreed that I would be preventing the workspace from opening in Mars again. Then it was done and I was able to launch Eclipse. As it was downloading the necessary pieces, I got a warning that downloading was slow. As I saw the progress bar, I got prompted to agree again. I clicked install and agreed to do the terms. The default location seemed like as good a place as any. (I was wondering how they were going to deal with that when Mars went native.) This is good as it lets you have both Mars and Neon installed as native apps. Which means it doesn’t matter what you choose because it takes you to this point. The installer says “Eclipse installer by Oomph” and gives you a choice of a number of Eclipse packages.
This is my first upgrade since that Eclipse became a native Mac app. With Eclipse Mars, they switched to a tar file/Eclipse installer for Mac. Overall, there’s a lot I’m excited about in this release. I hadn’t heard of Scout which is a framework for HTML 5 among other things. Wonder how much IBM paid to have Bluemix listed second.
It turns out not to matter if you choose the Java EE version or something else for the download. The list of Eclipse packages had a sponsored package in the list. The matrix comparing the packages is still clear. The “e” and “n” lights go out after a while which I suppose is cute. went with a neon colored theme to announce the launch of Neon.